Fuhlsbüttel


is an urban quarter in the north of Hamburg, Germany in the Hamburg-Nord district. It is known as the site of Hamburg's international airport, and as the location of a prison which served as a concentration camp in the Nazi system of repression. As a result of boundary changes, JVA Fuhlsbüttel prison is now in Ohlsdorf, Hamburg.

History

In 1871, at the declaration of the German Reich the village of Fuhlsbüttel was given to the State of Hamburg.

Fuhlsbüttel airship base

From 1912 Luftschiffhafen Fuhlsbüttel was the first hangar and headquarters of the Marine-Luftschiff-Abteilung of the German Kaiserliche Marine. From there and several new bases recon missions over the North Sea and bombing mission against England were flown during World War I.

Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp

On 4 September 1933, seven months after Hitler’s appointment as Chancellor of Germany, parts of Fuhlsbüttel prison were converted into a concentration camp. It was initially placed under the command of the SA. Most of the inmates were Communists, Social Democrats and other political opponents of Nazism, Jews, Jehovah's Witnesses, Romani, homosexual men and others whom the regime wanted to lock up. In 1936, the Gestapo began running the camp, then called Polizeigefängnis Fuhlsbüttel. Over 700 people were interned in the camp following Kristallnacht in 1938. Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp was referred to in common parlance as KolaFu and became a synonym for oppression and death through hard labor. Fuhlsbüttel was often an initial point of incarceration for prisoners who were sent on to other camps such as Buchenwald, Esterwegen, Neuengamme, Ravensbrück or Sachsenhausen. The camp was liberated on 3 May 1945, by which time over 250 people had been murdered there.
There is a memorial for the camp nearby.
A famous political prisoner held at the camp was First World War veteran - turned pacifist - Kapitänleutnant Hellmuth von Mücke.

Geography

In 2006 according to the statistical office of Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein, the quarter Fuhlsbüttel has a total area of.

Climate

Fuhlsbuettel has a typical oceanic climate.

Demographics

As of 2006, 11,890 people were living in the Fuhlsbüttel quarter. The population density was. 14.6% were children under the age of 18, and 20.5% were 65 years of age or older. 9.7% were immigrants. 508 people were registered as unemployed. In 1999 there were 6,768 households and 49.7% of all households were made up of individuals.
According to the Department of Motor Vehicles, 5,004 private vehicles were registered in the Fuhlsbüttel quarter.
There were two elementary schools and one secondary school in the Fuhlsbüttel quarter and 26 physicians in private practice and five pharmacies.

Transport

Fuhlsbüttel is served by the Hamburg U-Bahn line U1, with two stations, Fuhlsbüttel and Fuhlsbüttel Nord.
Since December 2008, Fuhlsbüttel has also been served by the Hamburg S-Bahn S1 with the Hamburg Airport station.

Notable buildings